John Stagliano founded and owns the Evil Angle Movie production company. He and the work that his company did pioneered what is now known as the Gonzo pornography genre. Evil Angle has attracted some of the best known pornographic film directors, and has won numerous awards in the adult film category.
When did the Neo Nazi regime start?
In a way, Neo-Natzism began immediately after the demise of Hitler's army in World War II; however, as a true and open movement, it began at different times in different countries. In Eastern Europe, Neo-Natzis began making headlines in 2003-4. In postwar Germany, the movement came out of the underground during the 1960's. In the US, the prevalence in overt Neo-Nazism came to its fruition during the 1980s.
How did the nazi party control the military?
the people of Germany were impressed of the lies and the powerful propaganda of Hitler's.
the people made him and the Nazi party to maintain the control of Germany.
The short answer is yes. The Nazis were very ultra conservative and the core policies of the Nazi ideology included racial supremacy, meaning Jews, Blacks, Gypsies, Jehovah's Witnesses, homosexuals, and the mentally or physically disabled should be put to death.
How did Adolf Hitler get the Nazis on his side?
He stayed loyal till the end
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He became the Party leader in 1921, when the Party was only two years old, so 'stayed loyal till the end' doesn't make sense as an answer.
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he forced Anton drexier the original leader to let him be leader because if he didnt Hitler would make his own party and take most of the members with him, he did not just "stay loyal till the end" and he killed himself and that isn't verry loyal.
How did Nazis brainwash Germans?
Before and during World War II, the Nazis tricked the Jews in Germany and elsewhere in multiple ways. Perhaps most sinister of all, they often assured the Jews being boarded on trains headed for concentration camps that the destination was going to be temporary and/or for their benefit. To this end, they advised the Jews to pack important belongings and extra clothing -- when, in actual fact, those possessions would be seized upon arrival, with the Jews themselves being immediately put to death or cruelly imprisoned without hope of release.
Did catholic church help Nazis?
No. Catholics followed a deeper and more passionate form of Christianity. The Nazis were for the most part Christian.
Sometimes though, a Catholic and/ or Christian would help out Jews in need and be instantly targeted by the Nazis.
What groups were tattooed by the Nazis?
Slavs, Negroes, Gypsies (considered a plague at the time), Jehovah's Witnesses, Jews, and Socialists or Communists. They were all minorities. Except for organized Christian groups of people who objected to what the government was doing -- like some Catholic groups -- most Christians were left alone, as 90% of the German population was Christian. The Nazis also hated homosexuals and people they considered 'anti-social.' this included alcoholics, the homeless, the unemployed, the lazy, the socially awkward, people with physical or mental disabilities, and the very old and sick in places such as nursing homes -- unless they were war veterans, they were thought to be wasting valuable resources, and so were poisoned or shot to death.
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What does the nazi simbol means?
Hitler took the Swastika from Hindu mythology. It symbolizes peace and prosperity. Ironic, no?
What other name was the Nazi known as?
In the early 1920s and 30s The nazis were known as a agressive governmental party but after 1933 Nazis were known as a agressive governmental party who persecuted people such as Jews. Nazis were responsible for killings of millions.
Nothing is wrong with Nazis they are just racist but everybody is racist in a way
When did the Nazis start to persecute the Jews?
This question is odd. It is formulated in a way that suggests there was an actual war between 'the Jews' and the Nazis. There was the Holocaust, in which the Nazis murdered about 6 million harmless and defenceless Jews. That began in late 1941/early 1942. The idea that there was an actual war between Jews and Nazis is false.
Why did the Nazis use the swastika as their symbol?
From the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum website:
The swastika has an extensive history. It was used at least 5,000 years before Adolf Hitler designed the Nazi flag. The word swastika comes from the Sanskrit svastika, which means "good fortune" or "well-being." The motif (a hooked cross) appears to have first been used in Neolithic Eurasia, perhaps representing the movement of the sun through the sky. To this day it is a sacred symbol in Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Odinism. It is a common sight on temples or houses in India or Indonesia. Swastikas also have an ancient history in Europe, appearing on artifacts from pre-Christian European cultures.
The symbol experienced a resurgence in the late nineteenth century, following extensive archeological work such as that of the famous archeologist Heinrich Schliemann. Schliemann discovered the hooked cross on the site of ancient Troy. He connected it with similar shapes found on pottery in Germany and speculated that it was a "significant religious symbol of our remote ancestors."
In the beginning of the twentieth century the swastika was widely used in Europe. It had numerous meanings, the most common being a symbol of good luck and auspiciousness. However, the work of Schliemann soon was taken up by völkisch movements, for whom the swastika was a symbol of "Aryan identity" and German nationalist pride
This conjecture of Aryan cultural descent of the German people is likely one of the main reasons why the Nazi party formally adopted the swastika or Hakenkreuz (Ger., hooked cross) as its symbol in 1920.
The Nazi party, however, was not the only party to use the swastika in Germany. After World War I, a number of far-right nationalist movements adopted the swastika. As a symbol, it became associated with the idea of a racially "pure" state. By the time the Nazis gained control of Germany, the connotations of the swastika had forever changed.
In Mein Kampf, Adolf Hitler wrote: "I myself, meanwhile, after innumerable attempts, had laid down a final form; a flag with a red background, a white disk, and a black swastika in the middle. After long trials I also found a definite proportion between the size of the flag and the size of the white disk, as well as the shape and thickness of the swastika."
The swastika would become the most recognizable icon of Nazi propaganda, appearing on the flag referred to by Hitler in Mein Kampf as well as on election posters, arm bands, medallions, and badges for military and other organizations. A potent symbol intended to elicit pride among Aryans, the swastika also struck terror into Jews and others deemed enemies of Nazi Germany.
Despite its origins, the swastika has become so widely associated with Nazi Germany that contemporary uses frequently incite controversy.
Further reading
Heidtmann, Horst. "Swastika." In Encyclopedia of the Third Reich, 937-939. New York: Macmillan, 1991.
Heller, Steven. The Swastika: Symbol Beyond Redemption?New York: Allworth Press, 2000.
Quinn, Malcolm. The Swastika: Constructing the Symbol.London: Routledge, 1994.
Hogan's Heroes - 1965 How to Win Friends and Influence Nazis 3-7 is rated/received certificates of:
Australia:G
The Nazis had many seals and emblems, however the most common is the swastika, which is essentially a perverted version of the Budhist solar cross. Hitler was an occult fanatic, and many of the symbols used by the Nazis can be traced back to occult or religious symbols.
In studying the NSDAP (Nazi Party) and how they were created, it appears that it was a progressive process that eventually allowed Adolf Hilter and his supporters to achieve power. Here is an outline of how they were created...
1. Hitler becomes 55th member of the DAP (German Workers' Party). This was the beginning party of the Nazis and entry of Adolf Hitler into politics.
2. Claiming to be a founding member of the party, the DAP is renamed the National Socialist German Workers' Party (abbreviated NSDAP).
3. Eventually, Hitler becomes Chancellor of Germany in 1933, although it was not a clear majority and did not give them unrestricted power.
4. Reichstag fire occurs and Hitler puts forth the "Enabling Act" that allows him unrestricted power for the next four years. During which, the Cabinet had the authority to enact laws without the participation of the Reichstag. Giving Hitler "dictatorial" status and allowing him power to install his own policies for Germany (24 March 1933).
5. President Paul von Hindenburg died August 2nd 1934 and his power was transferred to Hitler to give him the title of "Führer und Reichskanzler" (Leader and Chancellor)
These were some of the more important steps that effectively created Nazism and gave them power. And with events such as the Night of the Long Knives and Kristallnacht, it strengthened their control over the people of Germany.
Where did the Nazi's get there funding?
While some historians argue that he earnt his money 'hustling' on the streets, in more recent times, new evidence has come to light. It is now evident that Hitler earnt his money through prostitution and was apparently quite good.
Hitler Made people believe in him, thinking he was a great person.
Hitler made some laws.
people respected Hitler, so they gave him money.
when the holocaust began, Hitler would take money from the Jews.
Adolf Hitler later on commited suicide.
Mein Kampf was a best seller in Germany. Purchase was virtually mandatory, copies were given to newlyweds as gifts. Hitler received royalties on every sale of his book. This was enough to make him a wealthy man, financially.
What was ideology of NAZI party?
The policies of the Nazis were designed to help them maintain control over Germany. There are really two types of policies; your place in the nation, and absolute power.
First your place in the nation. The Nazis made it clear that men needed to work and fight for the glory of Germany. If you weren't in the army, then you should be in a factory slaving away. You should do both things to the best of your ability, and strive to be better at all things you do. Since the men all weighed their honor on their contribution to their country they did this.
Women were told that their place was to serve men and make babies. The Germans supported the stereotypical housewife, with many children, a neat house, and dinner ready for her husband when he got home from work.
Secondly the Nazis said that Hitler under all circumstances was right. No ifs ands or buts. The people accepted this because they liked, trusted, and believed in Hitler. Hitler essentially established an absolute monarchy with many of the regulations his government implemented.
What did the Nazis do with the people in Germany?
the Nazis regarded gypsies as 'untermenschen' or inferior people. they were disliked because they were not racially german, and they were seen as antisocial and unproductive because of their unsettled lifestyle. in this way they challenged the nazi ideal of national community. in 1939 about a million gypsies lived in Europe, with 30,000 in germany. by the end of the war, the Nazis had murdered 200,000 of them.
Organized racists who adopt ideas similar to the original Nazis in Germany. There are now modern Nazis that want to bring back the National Socialist Party.
The Nazi party was a political party in Germany. The leader of the party was Adolph Hitler.
Dictionary.com defines them as members of a fringe group inspired by Adolf Hitler's Nazis. These movements and groups are not confined to just one country. America is probably most famous for its neo-nazi organisations.
Here are a few pages on the subject
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neo-Nazism
(do not always trust Wiki, as anyone can alter the information on the website.
http://www.martinfrost.ws/htmlfiles/neonazism1.html
http://www.dc.state.fl.us/pub/gangs/prison.html
Look specifically at the Aryan Brotherhood.
The term neo-Nazism refers to any post- social or political movement seeking to revive , or some variant that echoes core aspects of Nazism. The term can also refer to the ideology of those movements.
The leader of the Nazi party in Germany?
The German Nazi party was called NSDAP. That party does not exist anymore. Nowadays there are two major parties in Germany that are commonly referred to as "Nazi party": the "Reps" (Republikaner, engl. Republicans) und the "NPD" (Nationale Partei Deutschland, engl. National Party Germany) "NAZI" is a German acronym that stands for "National Socialists Workers Party". It was basically a socialist overthrow of the former government, and ended up being very aggressive in their demands for change in Germany. As socialists, they wanted government control of much of the resources and businesses of Germany. There was a strong desire to penalize the wealthy and since many of the Jews in Germany had established businesses and made a good life for themselves, when Hitler wanted to rule all of Europe, it was easy to convince German citizens that the Jews were responsible for their financial problems during the 30's. Following WW1, Germany suffered greatly, in part because of the global economic depression of the 30's and also in part because of the sanctions that had been imposed on Germany following WW1 as required by the League of Nations. The NAZI party took over in Germany, mostly as a financial/political organization. Many of the NAZI's found it easy to be suspicious of anyone who was different, and turned their attention to Jews, Gypsies and Homosexuals, but that was just a convenient way to fund their war. The simple reality is, most collectivist political ideologies tend to minimize the value of the individual and as such the NAZI's found it quite easy to destroy anyone who appeared "different" (Jews, Gypsies and Homosexuals) in the name of a "greater good". Many today want to have us believe that NAZI's were an "ultra right wing" group. In reality, nothing could be further from the truth. NAZI's were so far socialist that they had no problem killing people to advance the NAZI agenda.
How did the Nazis maintain control in Germany?
The Nazis and Hitler had many extremely successful propoganda progresses. they put posters up everywhere that would charge up the German people against the Jews always had constipation and enjoyed occasional doodle sucking saying that they were attacking Germans by taking their jobs. they made the Jews look like monsters. Also the threat of death was preminent in the minds of Germans the Nazi regime threatenend to kill any opposers scaring many into supporting the Nazi party.
The German Nazi (National Socialist) Party was politically fascist, which is a corporatist, racist, overwhelmingly petty bourgeois pastiche of ideologies based on the supremacy of the state over the individual, the importance of tightly centralized power and the fetishization of national myths and heroes. Socialism is multinational and working-class in character, seeking to establish a fully democratic, classless society.
Confusion between, and the conflation of, Nazis and socialists is due to the Nazi Party's name, which was in full the National Socialist German Workers Party (NSDAP). When Hitler joined the DAP in the early 1920s and quickly became its most prominent member and leader, the party's basic politics were not much different from those that later marked the Nazis' rise to power -- anti-Semitic, anti-socialist, anti-communist, opportunistic and wedded to violence -- but they were murky. The party was also quite small, one of dozens of right-wing populist formations at the time. By upping the nationalist ante, scapegoating national minorities and adding "socialist" to the party's name, Hitler found he was better able to attract disenchanted WWI veterans and workers left jobless during the hard economic times that followed the Treaty of Versailles. To better distinguish his party and its ethos from the more established socialist and communist entities at the time, and to reflect its intense nationalism, he also added "national" to the name.
Socialism was the Nazis' greatest threat to power. In the years before the fated election that led to Hitler becoming chancellor, the Nazis' SA brownshirts engaged in incredibly violent, sometimes deadly, attacks on socialists and communists, in addition to their favored Jewish targets. Socialists and communists were some of the first concentration camp inmates.
also the politicians that put him there to start with. They were greedy and thought that Hitler wouldn't be in power long. By the time they realised what was happening they were in jail or camps
Why did Nazis force certain groups to wear badges with a yellow triangle?
D. The wearer is also jewish
What way were the Nazis and fascist alike?
Both fascists and Nazis employed a private, but strictly controlled economy. They were both led by totalitarian dictators that could make up rules whenever they felt like it.
For additional clarification, the term fascist covers most governments that are secular and have total control of a nations politics and economy. The first fascist in Europe was Mussolini in Italy. The fascism in Nazi Germany was built on the same principles, however, Nazi only describes the fascist system in Germany.